Jennifer K. Dick's 'Lilith: A Novel in Fragments'
Author photo (left) courtesy of Jennifer K. Dick.
Artifact, from the Latin arte, “by or using art,” + factum, “something made.” But an “artefact,” in French, is also something accidental, a residual effect created by human beings that distorts observation of a natural phenomenon, like footsteps distorting a seismic measurement. Jennifer K. Dick’s Lilith revolves in part around this ambiguous status between the accidental and the deliberately formed: the reader encounters a series of enigmatic textual objects that seem alternately laden with meaning.
Johanna Drucker on Close Listening
@ PennSound
complete reading (28:41): MP3
complete conversation with Charles Bernstein(29:47): MP3
Kelly Writers House, March 14, 2011